New blog for sc1rpym1z we got deleted. Trying to appeal tho!
i don't do bad sauce passes
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Misplaced Lens Cap
occasionally subtle
Alisa U Zemlji Chuda
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
One Nice Bug Per Day
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Monterey Bay Aquarium
cherry valley forever

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YOU ARE THE REASON
Jules of Nature
Peter Solarz

ellievsbear
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DEAR READER
trying on a metaphor
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

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@themetafarers
New blog for sc1rpym1z we got deleted. Trying to appeal tho!
Would you survive a slasher horror film? Pick an emoji and then click read more to find out your fate!
⚔️
💉
🪓
🔪
⛓️
🪦
⚔️ — no. better luck next time!
💉 — you bled out after being stabbed by the killer ): rip
🪓 — congrats. you’re the final girl!
🔪 — the killer gutted you like a fish
⛓️ — you’re the killer and you killed everyone :) congrats?
🪦 — you survived but the killer has driven you to insanity
by Gerard Donelan
For historical context, this is about making a panel for the AIDS quilt, a memorial project which began in San Francisco in 1985. Due to the stigma surrounding both homosexuality and AIDS during this time, victims of the epidemic were often cremated and disposed of or buried without ceremony, their bodies unclaimed by their families or origin or held by hospitals rather than released to same-sex partners.
Each panel in the AIDS quilt memorializes a life lost to the disease. Each panel is 3′ x 6′ (approximately 1 meter wide and 2 meters long), the approximate dimensions of a cemetery plot. The quilt, which then consisted of 1,920 panels representing 1,920 individuals lost to AIDS, was first displayed in Washington DC in 1987. The public response was immediate, positive, and overwhelming, and the quilt began taken around the country to be displayed in more cities. At each stop, the names of the dead were read out loud. At each stop, more panels were added.
By the time the quit returned to the US capital in 1988, it had more than 8,000 panels.
The quilt continues to grow. Today, it has over 50,000 panels memorializing over 100,000 of our dead. It’s too large now to physically display in its entirety, but you can view the entire thing online. There are also curated virtual displays of just panels which honor the Black and native people killed by the virus because in the US (and likely abroad, although I don’t know enough about public health elsewhere to say so with confidence), communities of color are disproportionately impacted by epidemics, as we have seen time and time again.
You can learn more about the quilt and its history here, and you can learn how to add a panel to the quilt here.
If you’re unable to access the quilt, here’s a zoomed in screenshot of the bottom left corner:
The quilt is made up of several panel, each panel itself consisting of 1 to 8 quilts.
Here’s a screenshot of the whole thing:
This is only about half of the people - our people - who were left to die because the government didn’t think “the gay disease” was a problem. This is why we march.
My secret hot take that I harshly judge anyone who disagrees with is that I think literally anyone can be reformed and that punitive justice, while satisfying, is not effective or humane.
I want a massive prison reform not just because of the racism but because of the horrible cruelty of expecting people to stop doing something when you hit them hard enough. Even when it works (which it usually doesn't for various reasons), you cause more harm than good.
There’s this ask reddit post about your weirdest childhood and the story is about this guy who was playing in the woods by a creek with his friend when a guy in full late 1800s formal clothing including a top hat just walked out of the forest, said “Hello boys!” and kept walking. This is why I want historical clothing so badly. The ultimate prank.
give someone something to think about for the rest of their life
be the ghost encounter YOU want to see in this world
This reminds me of my great uncle who used to hunt with a musket because he enjoyed the feel of it, and he also had an assortment of deer hide clothes he’d made or bought from local first nations, and he went out hunting when he was like 14 and got lost and came across this man in the woods and was like,,,,, can you help, i’m lost. and the guy looks him up and down and my uncle realizes he’d unintentionally dressed in all his deerskin clothes and a coonskin cap when the guy asks him, “how long have you been lost for?”
Transmultiphobia
Transmultiphobia is discrimination against multigender individuals. It intersects with other kinds of transphobia like transmisogyny, transandrophobia, exorsexism, enbyphobia, and more.
For those unaware, being multigender means being two or more genders. This is commonly male and female, but not always. Someone could be female and agender, or male and a demigirl. Any combination is possible.
(Personally, I'm male and female and probably something else I don't have a word for. I use bigender, multigender, and genderqueer interchangeably to describe how I feel. If anyone was wondering.)
Why do we need a word for this? Well, largely because our discrimination is something it's important to speak up about, and doing that is easiest when there's a word. Speaking is harder when I have to say "those who discriminate against multigender people" versus "transmultiphobes." Having a word can also help to bring awareness to the issue.
So, what is the issue?
Quite a lot!
Some of my favorites (by which I mean least favorites, they suck)
Being told to pick a side? Sound familiar? A lot of this is recycled biphobia/panphobia/etc. Can exclusionists come up with new rhetoric?
The phrase "men and non-men." This is one I see a lot in queer spaces. Most people don't see a problem with it. The problem, other than reinforcing a new binary and pushing nonbinary people in with femininity, is that some people are both a man and a gender that is not a man. The two can't be separated. People try anyway.
Invisibility. I so rarely see multigender identities talked about, even with other queer people. I barely knew it existed until recently.
Pronoun erasure. Pronouns don't always equal gender, of course, and multigender folks can use pronouns other than he/she, but that is a way to reflect being both male and female. He/she pronouns? Completely erased. It's not even a matter of multiple pronoun erasure- he/they and she/they pronouns get recognition in queer and even some allocishet spaces. I have friends who will think to include neopronouns before considering he/she, which was shocking because he and she individually are much more prevalent than neopronouns, but it seems like together they disappear. We disappear.
The way being multigender impacts sexuality gets mocked and occasionally invites harassment. Multigender WLW seem to get the brunt of it. (Nice going, exclusionists, it's really radical and woke of you to try your best to police how women express gender and sexuality. Really beating the patriarchy there /s). Anyone who's a man and a lesbian gets so much shit for it. Predators, infiltrators into the community- you name an insult, someone's probably set it. And multigender MLM who are also women can get treated as fetishizers.
This isn't just discrimination from other queer people, either. Have you seen the way cisnormativity talks about gender? We all learn that male and female are polar opposites, they cancel each other out, they contradict each other, they can't possibly coexist. But they do. It's just not recognized.
Basically, we multigender people get a lot of shit for existing, even within our own community. Now we have a word for it. So if more people talked about this, that would be very cool.
TLDR: transmultiphobia is a word to describe discrimination against multigender people. it covers social norms, interpersonal discrimination, and systemic issues
My new blog was already termed and I have no idea why.
Yeah that seems like it could be an explanation, because I only used this account on my phone with a VPN.
My new blog was already termed and I have no idea why.
Only thing I can think is that either they are doing something with ip addresses, or someone I follow is actually a rat.
I don't want to be super paranoid but I literally did nothing that could have gotten me termed I don't understand.
My new blog was already termed and I have no idea why.
Only thing I can think is that either they are doing something with ip addresses, or someone I follow is actually a rat.
My new blog was already termed and I have no idea why.
Made a new blog, I followed people on there so if you see a follow from a similar blog it's legit
Absolutely incredible work, lads
Moche necklace with gold beads in the shape of toads, 1-800 AD; Peru
all modern jewelry designs are canceled, this is peak aesthetic
this frog necklace from 1000 years ago has the exact same aesthetic as the lego bonsai tree
@randomitemdrop
Item: Necklace of Small Toads; as the Necklace of Fireballs but instead of fireballs it’s small toads
(commission) barbie x the ring
just found out about this cute little birdy and i am in love
from the above-linked ebird.org:
Anis are bizarre, coal-black cuckoos with long floppy tails and unique, curiously tall, flattened bills. Groove-billed occurs in a variety of open and semi-open habitats in tropical lowlands and foothills, typically staying low in shrubs and grasses. Gregarious and not particularly graceful; usually seen crashing around awkwardly in small groups.
oh my god
@zehirgirl @interference-signal !!!!!
A new discovery could rewrite the story of reptilian sex.
The discovery is both surprising and not. The structures are small, fragile, and easily to damage or overlook; Sara Ruane, the assistant curator of herpetology at the Field Museum, in Chicago, says that learning about Folwell’s work was “the first time I have ever even thought about” snake penises having a female analog. Multiply that sentiment countless times over, and perhaps it explains how researchers mostly missed an entire organ, in an entire group of thousands of animals, until now. But evolutionarily speaking, there’s no reason snakes shouldn’t have clitorises, which arise from the same knot of cells that gives rise to penises. In addition to lizards, snakes’ closest relatives, other groups of reptiles have clitorises, as do mammals.
WE HAVE MILF IS A SLUR DISCOURSE I REPEAT WE HAVE MILF IS A SLUR DISCOURSE
hahahaha